It might be fun to do that, if we can make the dates work.” McKenzie’s include pandemic-affected musicals and an imminent serious album release. McKenzie and he are working on separate projects with their Conchords co-creator James Bobin.
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No longer in charge of the punishing network schedules of Wellington Paranormal and What We Do in the Shadows, Clement is looking forward to bingeing his friends’ projects, like The White Lotus (“I loved how Mike White directed me on Brad’s Status”) and Reservation Dogs (“I have some great conversations with Sterlin about indigenous peoples and the supernatural”).īut as for Flight of the Conchords, the previously discussed special or film isn’t even on the backburner – due to the band members’ hectic schedules. I feel younger and healthier than I did two years ago,” he says, adding: “I was basically in a vortex of never-ending work.”
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“I was definitely flying and travelling too much. A lifelong non-drinker who isn’t about the rock star lifestyle, his jet-setting has been grounded by Covid-19. He lives with Sopho and his Greek-Kiwi actor-director wife, Miranda Manasiadis, whom he met while studying film and theatre at the city’s Victoria University. Unlike Waititi, who lives in LA, Clement is happy to be based in walkable central Wellington. “It’s exciting for me doing something large-scale.” “It’s the dream job, really.” Clement reveals they are also writing a semi-historical kids’ adventure show with The In-Betweeners’ Iain Morris.
Flight of the conchords film tv#
The duo have written two of 10 long-form episodes for their untitled action-comedy adventure, which Apple TV will shoot in the first half of next year. He suffers no fools even though he is one, in a different way.” “We’ve got the same language and the same way of thinking, the same references.
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Jemaine Clement on Taika Waititi: ‘We’ve got the same language and the same way of thinking, the same references.’ Photograph: Hagen Hopkins He memorably voiced Moana’s crab Tamatoa in te reo, and is heartened by the progress. “The whole landscape of te reo has changed in New Zealand,” Clement says. Sgt Maaka and his colleagues also speak some te reo Māori. One of Wellington Paranormal’s strengths is its inclusion of a Māori supernatural perspective, of legends and mythical creatures such as Taniwha. “Who would have thought that I’d spend four years making a police show? That’s a warning for any Guardian readers thinking of embarking on vandalism.” And then it turns out you’re breaking a big rule,” he laughs. It feels like you’re breaking a small rule. “That’s part of the fun, and part of the risk, of a small town: you’re let loose. Speaking of Paranormal, Clement – now 47 – reflects on his own first brush with law enforcement: when he broke into a seemingly abandoned building in his provincial home town, Masterton, as a teenager. “They were too scared to let anyone do comedy.” “Bret’s too polite – I would love to make fun of TVNZ turning us down, it amused me,” Clement says with a laugh, gently tapping my dining room table.
Flight of the conchords film series#
TVNZ, Wellington Paranormal’s producers, notoriously declined Clement and Bret McKenzie’s pitch for the series Flight of the Conchords – before HBO approved one of the hottest things worldwide in comedy for a couple of years.
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Mike Minogue, Maaka Pohatu and Karen O’Leary in Wellington Paranormal, a spinoff from the vampire film What We Do in the Shadows.